  legalbegal No Mercy Premium join:2004-11-08 Beverly Hills, CA
| reply to emulation Re: Pluto Data Credit Card Charge
Filing charges against Answer Quick won't do you a bit of good, as they're not the problem.
Yes dear, filing charges against Answer Quick would be the ONLY way to get the ball rolling. If Answer Quick did not want to get involved, then they should screen their clients with more scrutiny and ensure that they are running a "legitimate" operation. Period.
If you suspect fraud, you've got bigger problems than messing with some answering service in Louisiana.
Sounds like you are trying to create a detour. I think I will also notify the State of Louisiana Office of the Attorney General as well as the BBB and the State Corporation Commission TODAY!
People don't get credit card numbers for no reason. Perhaps you should consider being a tad more careful what you do with your cards. My credit cards don't have any fraudulent charges, then again, I don't go buying porn on the internet or other interesting purchases.
People (probably YOU) break into Internet Servers ALL the time and STEAL contact information. I personally am a developer who has to make purchases online quite a bit with our "Company Credit Card". So implying that our Company Credit Card was used to make a PORN purchase is ridiculous and quite interesting.
The representative at Answer Quick did say that the fradulent charge was made to purchase a DVD. I am wondering now if ANSWER QUICK knows more than they say. Are you making an ASSUMPTION that I purchase porn or do you know for SURE in that YOU KNOW WHAT THE FRADULENT CHARGE WAS USED TO PURCHASE? Sounds to me like you know.
And how do WE know what you go online purchasing? You could be sitting on a stack of porn as far as we know. Don't just show up on a message board and expect any respect because you made 1 post. We don't know you or care what the hell you purchase online.
Be very Careful what you type. It may just come back to haunt you. |
|
 emulation
join:2005-02-21 Baton Rouge, LA
| ad hominem much?
Look, I don't care who you file a report with, because it will never affect me. I'm making posts from my home IP and I (oibviously) don't care if you log it.
Look, I wasn't being rude to you, but merely attempting to tell you what was going on. I was trying to help you.
Haunt me? I'd like to know how.
This thread is hilarious. |
|
  legalbegal No Mercy Premium join:2004-11-08 Beverly Hills, CA | No you are hilarious. Get a life. |
|
 Phaetos
join:2003-09-21 Slaughter, LA
1 edit | reply to legalbegal said by legalbegal :People (probably YOU) break into Internet Servers ALL the time and STEAL contact information. I personally am a developer who has to make purchases online quite a bit with our "Company Credit Card". So implying that our Company Credit Card was used to make a PORN purchase is ridiculous and quite interesting. Begal, I find that a bit harsh of a statement. I agree that what has happened to you is wrong and scary that it can happen. But going around accusing people of breaking into servers to steal information with absolutely NO proof of that can get you in just as much trouble as you are trying to cause for that individual that tried to give you a very honest and what they considered helpful information. I have lived in Baton Rouge my whole life and have known people that worked for Answer Quick and myself have worked for an answering service, of which you apparently never have. Never, not once, have they ever been accused of such a thing. If they had I can guarantee you it would have ended up on any of our news channels, they are fiends for getting that kind of information for a story AnswerQuick has been a long respected member of the commercial community for as long as I can remember. What the poster said was very true. All they are is an answering service. If a client gives them a way to access information, then so be it. AnswerQuick is not a scam and is in no way directly affiliated with stealing credit card information.
Just my 2 cents worth. |
|
  legalbegal No Mercy Premium join:2004-11-08 Beverly Hills, CA
2 edits | Phaetos,
Funny you would comment what I said in defense of myself. I was merely returning the insult back to a "NEW" poster who implied that I purchased porn online and that's why I made those comments. If "Answer Quick" did not want to get involved, then "Answer Quick" should have kept their distance.
You see they are STILL answering the phones for "Pluto Data" -whomever Pluto Data is. No one knows who they are or how to contact them.
The reason that any scamming business is viewed a repected member of any community is because they have yet to be CAUGHT. Just because they look legit doesn't mean that they are.
How would you know what they have been accussed of unless you have the inside track? I have lived in Baton Rouge as well and have relatives who reside there. You should be careful what you imply unless you know the whole story.
Good luck with your Answering Service Career, Phaetos! |
|
 Phaetos
join:2003-09-21 Slaughter, LA
1 edit | said by legalbegal :Phaetos, How would you know what they have been accussed of unless you have the inside track? I have lived in Baton Rouge as well and have relatives who reside there. You should be careful what you imply unless you know the whole story.
Apparently you don't read well nor think clearly in your current state of rage. If you read what I said, " Never, not once, have they ever been accused of such a thing. If they had I can guarantee you it would have ended up on any of our news channels, they are fiends for getting that kind of information for a story " I never implied that I knew the whole story. If you can't tell from the way it was written that it was a PERSONAL opinion, then I doubt your legal skills also. |
|
 jdiddypdx
join:2003-08-06 Lake Oswego, OR
| As someone that has worked in for a credit card bank (FCNB). Here is what you do. Don't call the number on the statement. Call your bank ASAP. Have them put a dispute on the transaction. Every FDIC insured bank has their own security department that will do all the leg work for you. Keep in mind, it's the banks money not yours at this point not yours. If you see another charge. Call again, change your credit card number. Bingo your done. |
|
  The Folsom Kindly Shut Your Noise Hole. Premium join:2003-01-31 Yucaipa, CA 1 edit | reply to legalbegal retracted |
|
  prestonlewis Premium,MVM join:2003-04-13 Sacramento, CA
·VoiceStick
| reply to emulation said by emulation :I was trying to help you. This thread is hilarious. Your company agreed to represent these scamsters and be the public face for them. If anyone needs help, it is your company who agreed to have your phone number pasted on all of these scams and you ARE the first number/company called by victims, police, banks and others investigating these numerous crimes. Your reference to these numerous crimes, which your company willingly is a part of, as "hilarious" is an indicator of your company's bad taste and poor business practices. You'll not find it hilarious if your company is run out of business for agreeing to be the front for these crimes and you and your college buddies have to go find work in some pizza parlor somewhere. I don't think you'll get the last laugh being associated with criminals. |
|
  www4chanorg
@attbi.com
1 edit | reply to legalbegal People (probably YOU) break into Internet Servers ALL the time and STEAL contact information. I personally am a developer who has to make purchases online quite a bit with our "Company Credit Card". So implying that our Company Credit Card was used to make a PORN purchase is ridiculous and quite interesting. [mod edit] - flaming has no place in this thread or on the site - just FYI |
|
  ummm101234
@gsk.com
| reply to Phaetos Re: Pluto Data Credit Card Charge
Seems like if Answer Quick is such a great company - they would pull the plug on Pluto Data ltd, since they must be receiving a ton of calls for unauthorized charges. Also, I have worked for a call center before and the entire operation there was not professional. This was somewhere else besides AnswerQuick, but I tell you the people they hired and the stuff that went on there was not the best in the world. |
|
 Kip patterson Premium join:2000-10-23 Columbus, OH | I think most folks here have concluded that they terminated Pluto several days ago.
You seem to have had a bad experience. In what way does it apply to AnswerQuick? |
|
  sweintz Premium join:2002-03-01 Hamden, CT
| reply to ummm101234 said by ummm101234:
Seems like if Answer Quick is such a great company - they would pull the plug on Pluto Data ltd, since they must be receiving a ton of calls for unauthorized charges. Also, I have worked for a call center before and the entire operation there was not professional. This was somewhere else besides AnswerQuick, but I tell you the people they hired and the stuff that went on there was not the best in the world. Dude - pay attention. Answerquick pulled the plug on them a while ago. |
|
 Dognut
join:2005-03-04 Hilton Head Island, SC
1 edit | reply to Phaetos From a law enforcement point of view, I think what the FBI (or more likely the Secret Service who handle major credit card cases and other money cases) will find, once all is said and done, is that there are a string of companies involved here. Its much along the lines of money laundering. You run drug money through several companies and it comes out the other end clean, so to speak. Most of the time the initial company knows the deal and possibly the end company, but the intermediaries, for security reasons, have no clue. The problem comes in that by the time this credit card scam is tracked down to the real suspect, he or she has grabbed whatever personal property they have in the office they rented just for this scam, and left. The most I've ever seen them catch is some poor flunky who was hired out of a crack house to answer the phone in a bare office. In this case the flunky knew who and what she was working for but could provide no personal information on her boss except his name was Jim and he was a 6 foot tall, 175 pound white male with brown hair. Not much to go on, so they shelve the case and move on to more pressing matters. The credit card company fixes the charge on people's accounts so the only loser is the credit card company. Buddy of mine from ROTC went to work for the Secret Cervix (he hates that:D) told me that even when they do get a good case together, many times the prosecutor drops the case as too old or makes a deal with the suspect that amounts to a slap on the wrist. I'm not saying we should not investigate this crap. I'd love to get my hands on one of the bastidges. Give him a choice of 15 years in the pen or 15 minutes with 5 of his biggest victims. But seriously, don't be discouraged. Go through the motions of filing your case, but don't let it get you all worked up. Life is too short and full of reasons for heart attacks. The only reason I knew about this scam is a guy filed a report with one of my people yesterday. Mine is a county agency and can't investigate federal crimes but we do pass the info on the the feds. I had an extra minute and ran a search. Found this web site and thread. Having been a victim before (and not from a porn site whoever your name was) I can relate to the anger adn feeling of violation you people feel. The best we could tell our guy at this point was to contact Equifax and such, contact the Social Security guys, contact the bank, etc...and get all his stuff changed. Pain in the buttocks but its the only way to gain some semblance of security again. Plotting gruesome deaths for the scammers also helps the mental situation. |
|
 Kip patterson Premium join:2000-10-23 Columbus, OH | The crooks are in Nicosia, Cyprus, not the US.
Agreed, it is not likely that they will be caught, nor would they have been had it occurred in the US. |
|
 Dognut
join:2005-03-04 Hilton Head Island, SC | Sounds like a good road trip. Bring large guns. |
|
  BB72
@12.96.x.x
| reply to Dognut Let's not rule out the fact that we might have terrorist activity here. It is such a scary thought. I know it seems far fetched and that most suspects in the past may have been some flunky but we should be looking at this in a much larger scale here. Especially since this Pluto Data is a foreign company. The USA Today article makes sense and even though we only see a small portion of victims here this is an incredibly serious and sad thing. I would hate to think that money withdrawn illegally from my account was used to fund a thing like September 11th. Thank God for this website and other sites like it that people like us can come together and hopefully make some difference. |
|
  Missygirl
@rr.com
| reply to emulation You stepped over the line when you inferred that people who use their cards for inet purchases have nefarious reasons for doing so... ie... porn?
In that one paragraph, you went from providing information that may be helpful, to being a condescending, uninformated, immature college puke.
Why did you have to go there... emulation? What people purchase should have nothing to do with whether or not they are robbed blind! Get real. |
|
  passowrd
@newagetrans.com
| reply to ummm101234 Got ripped off too. Saw a charge of $29.99 on my Visa. Called the 800 number and would only get a busy signal. This sucks! Called my bank, and though they can't remove the charge, they cancelled my card and issued a new one. These Pluto people need to go down hard!! |
|